Interactive Transcript
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So this patient is an 82-year-old female,
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who has a liver mass, and so I'm going
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to show you what that mass looks like.
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Uh, this was subsequently treated,
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and I'll show you what the
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post-treatment scan looks like as well.
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Firstly, let's look at the pre-treatment scan.
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I'm going to show you the, uh,
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post-contrast images, and we're going to
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focus on one of the liver lesions here.
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This is the T1-weighted,
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fat-saturated, post-contrast sequence.
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This is the arterial phase, and I'm showing
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you now the portal venous phase on this image.
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And we see a lesion.
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Right over here is in segment
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5, and it demonstrates non-RIM
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arterial phase hyperenhancement.
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If we look at this lesion, it's more
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than, uh, 20 millimeters in size if we
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were to measure it from here to here.
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And in the portal venous
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phase, this has washout.
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This, in fact, also has a pseudocapsule that
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surrounds this, and so you put it all together.
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This is compatible with LI-RADS,
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LI-RADS lesion, and in this particular patient,
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had this one solitary lesion, relatively
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small size, and so is deemed to be an
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appropriate candidate for microwave
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ablation therapy, which was performed
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and a follow-up study was done after this.
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So this is an image from the follow-up
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study performed after ablation,
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if that, uh, LI-RADS 5 lesion in segment 5.
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This particular sequence is a T1 FAT SAT,
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pre-contrast image, and we can see quite
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aa sizable cavity now, um, in segment 5.
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And one of the reasons that when they do
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these ablations, they not only ablate the
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tumor, they ablate a margin around the tumor
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as well, so the cavity ends up looking a
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little bit bigger than the lesion itself.
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Within this cavity there
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is hyperintense ablation
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T1 content.
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That's not uncommon to see, particularly
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when they do these percutaneous ablations.
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This reflects hemorrhagic blood products.
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This represents proteinaceous debris, alright?
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But for practical purposes, when we see
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this hyperintense T1 content on the
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non-contrast image, we know that when we look
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at the post-contrast images, we have to look
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at the subtraction images to really see
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if there is any true enhancement
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underlying this high T1 signal.
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And moving on to our post-contrast images,
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this is T1, Fatsat, post-contrast, arterial
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phase, portal venous phase. Both of these
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images are subtraction images, again,
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to negate the appearance T1 content
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that's expected after these ablations.
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And we can see the ablation
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cavity centered in segment 5.
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And inside of it, this really looks avascular.
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There's no internal
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enhancement within this cavity.
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Inside of it, it just remains
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quite dark and black in appearance.
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And around the periphery, you may argue there's
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a little bit of very, very thin rim enhancement.
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And that's okay.
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We often see that degree of rim
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enhancement following ablations.
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The key thing, though, is to reevaluate that
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small rim of enhancement on subsequent studies.
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On any subsequent studies, it should
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either look the same or get better.
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Smaller in size, become less conspicuous.
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It should never get thicker.
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It should never become nodular
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or get thicker like this.
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And once it starts to do that, you've got
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to be worried about recurrent disease.
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But in this instance, you don't see any of that.
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And so this equates to successful
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treatment of the thyroid's lesion.
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